In Beyondthe Horizon and Diff'rent, Eugene O'Neill reveals that
dreams are necessary to sustain life. Through the use of the characters
Robert Mayo, Andrew Mayo, Ruth and Emma Crosby, O'Neill proves that
without dreams, man could not exist. Each of his characters are
dependent on their dreams, as they feed their destiny. When they deny
their dreams, they deny their destiny, altering their lives forever. O'Neill
also points out, that following your dreams, brings you true happiness,
something all of his characters do not experience. The characters of
Rob, Andy and Emma are stripped of their dreams and their destinies, by
the ones who profess to love them. Rob and Andy unknowingly allowed
Ruth to lead them down a path, they were not meant to travel. Emma is
the same as Rob and Andrew in this respect, because she let Caleb's
actions control her ability to follow her dream. Rob is a dreamer. His only
wish is to go `beyond the horizon' and discover the mystery of life. Andy,
however, is Rob's opposite. Andrew is practical and down-to-earth. His
deepest desire is to spend his life farming. "One constructs the world out
of fact, the other out of pure imagination." Rob's quest is strange to Andy;
it goes beyond anything he can comprehend. Andrew, who is "A Mayo
through and through." does not think in the imaginative terms Rob does.
"It's just beauty that's calling me-the beauty of the far off and unknown in
quest of the secret which is hidden over there, beyondthe horizon."
(Horizon, 85) Andy does understand, that his brother could never be
happy living on the farm, because his heart is elsewhere. Emma is like
Rob in a few ways. Both characters have idealistic views. Rob believes
in the secret beyondthe horizon and Emma in Caleb's fidelity. Neither of
them consider the fact things may not be as they perceive them. For
Emma, this innocence is her undoing. Emma considers Caleb to be
`diff'rent'. This difference is what makes him special to her. She trusts he
will always be this way and that they will always have a future. "But
you're diff'rent. You just got to be diff'rent from the rest." Andrew is not
like Rob or Emma. He is always logical. He considers Rob's dreams to
be a result of his College education, something Andy does not have.
Andy has no desire to go anywhere beyondthe farm, because it has
everything he needs. He is the one to tell Rob that "we've got all you're
looking for right on this farm." (Horizon, 85) This is his nature and to
change it, alters the course of his life, as well as that of the people around
him. In BeyondThe Horizon, Ruth is the catalyst for the changes that
occur. She convinces Rob she loves him and that he should stay on the
farm, instead of going in search of his dreams. "Oh, Rob! Don't go away!
Please! You musn't now! You can't! I won't let you! It'd break my my
heart!" (Horizon, 91) Rob does not consider the long-term effects of this
decision, he sees only momentary satisfaction. Rob does not realize the
impact his decision will have on Andy, who is also in love with Ruth.
Andy, thinks he could never stand to live on the farm, with Ruth and Rob
married. He feels in time he would grow to hate it. "I can wish you and
Ruth all the good luck in the world but you can't expect me to stay
around here and watch you two together, day after day." (Horizon, 110)
So, Andy defies his own nature and sets out on the boat, Rob was to
travel on, in search of happiness. This is a point that Andy is similar to
Emma, in the way that she reacted to someone else's actions. Caleb
cheated on her when he was away at sea. Emma being a highly moral
person, cannot love him the same way any more. "I can't Ma. It makes
him another person not Caleb, but someone just like all the others." (Dif,
512) Emma made Caleb out to be the perfect man and made him totally
infallible in her eyes. She did not fall in love with Caleb the person, but
with Caleb the ideal, that never actually existed. Many people try to save
her from making the biggest mistake of her life, like Rob tried to stop
Andy, but to no avail. Emma remains firm in her decision, despite her
mother's warnings. "It'd be jest like goin' agen an act of nature for you
not to marry him." (Dif, 512) By rejecting Caleb, Emma denies herself a
future, because she knows she could never marry anyone else. "She
loses her only chance for happiness because of her wilfulness and her
tragic flaw, an overweening pride." In essence Emma cannot live with
Caleb and cannot live without him. Rob is Emma's opposite, because he
does not need another person to make him happy, he only needs to be
free, to go where he wishes. However, even he does not realize it till the
end. For each of the characters, tragedy results, because they did not
follow their destinies. Ruth because of her haste in deciding to marry
Rob, has grown to hate him. She realizes that she never loved him and
wishes Andy would come home and save her from her prison of a
marriage. "Ruth Mayo, having married the wrong Mayo brother must
see her marriage fall apart, along with the farm. Her consolation is that
the absent Andy still loves her and he will be a final refuge for her." Andy
does not give Ruth the response she desires and she becomes more
bitter and cold as the years pass. Rob, because of Ruth's treatment of
him, has grown depressed and no longer dreams. He realizes what he
has been deprived of and thinks he still has a chance to reclaim it. Rob
was a failure as a farmer, just as Andy predicted. "Farming ain't in your
nature as a place to work and grow things, you hate it." (Horizon, 84)
His true nature tried to lead him down the right path, but he refused it.
Rob's life could never work out as long as he is trapped behind the hills
surrounding his farm. "For Robert Mayo the hills surrounding the Mayo
farm are a physical symptom of the restrictions, the limitedness and the
monotony of farm life." The restrictions slowly suffocate him and
eventually destroy his imagination, so he can even no longer dream of a
happier life. Andy's punishment, is that he is never truly happy. He spent
eight years running from who he is and where he belongs.
"Andrew, who has changed during the eight or so years of the play's
action from a healthy young farmer into a tense, hard, even ruthless and
unsuccessful-speculator, is the greatest failure of all, for he has spent
eight years running away from himself and has been changed from
creator to parasite." This is Andrew's sad fate, which is intensified when
Ruth admits she loves him. Knowing his brother is dying because of
Ruth's admission, Andy must live with the guilt of knowing he had a part
in his brother's suffering and eventual death. Ruth's interference in the
course of the Mayo brothers' lives ruined the lives of all three, Ruth
included. Ruth and Caleb seem to have the same role, however, Caleb
was not the one that revealed his infidelity. Emma's brother Jack told her,
which makes him the catalyst in Emma and Caleb's destruction. Benny,
merely took advantage of the situation. Emma's involvement with Benny,
was her last feeble attempt to find happiness, even though she knew, it
was not what she is looking for. She only thought she loved him,
because she was so desperate to be loved. But because of her own
stubbornness, her chances of happiness are again thwarted. Caleb, asks
her one last time to marry him and still indignant, Emma turns him down.
With that, she sends Caleb over the edge and he kills himself, ruining her
last chance to be happy. Only then does Emma realize what she has
done and kills herself in guilt. "Only after Caleb's death does she realize
that his love for her remained untarnished, while hers for him was
flawed." Emma's flaw is her high moral standards, whereas Rob's is his
lack of foresight. "It is ironic, but the stress is on emptiness, not on the
irony." The emptiness, as the audience realizes, is all that is left of the
characters of both plays. Emma Crosby and Rob Mayo were both
physically destroyed by the decisions they made in life. Ruth and Andy,
although they survive, they have little left in them. Ruth is no longer
capable of love and Andy is no longer capable of being a farmer. Instead
of a creator he is the destroyer. But unlike Emma and Rob, Andy and
Ruth have the chance to correct their mistakes and get back on their
proper path. If Ruth can get past her bitterness and Andy past his grief
they can still live a happy life. Rob and Emma however, have paid the
price in full, for neglecting their dreams, proving that without their dreams
they were nothing. They were merely the vessel in which their dreams
would be realized. When the dream died, the vessel no longer had a
purpose and they were slowly destroyed. BibliographyBigsby,
C.W.E. A Critical Introduction To Twentieth Century Drama. London:
Cambridge University Press, 1982.Floyd, Virginia. The Plays Of Eugene
O'Neill. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing, 1985.Leech, Clifford.
O'Neill. London: Oliver & Boyd, 1966.O'Neill, Eugene. "Beyond The
Horizon". The Plays Of Eugene O'Neill. New York: Random House
Publishing, 1954.O'Neill, Eugene. "Diff'rent". The Plays Of Eugene
O'Neill. New York: Random House Publishing, 1954.Raleigh, John.
Eugene O'Neill The Man And His Works. Toronto: Forum House
Publishing Company, 1969.
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in the secret beyond the horizon and Emma in Caleb's fidelity. Neither of
them consider the fact things may not be as they perceive them. For
Emma,. characters are
dependent on their dreams, as they feed their destiny. When they deny
their dreams, they deny their destiny, altering their lives forever. O'Neill
also